The humble starfish (Asterias Forbesii) does not have a regular migratory route. It does however, floop. Where 'flooping' is the action of large numbers of starfish travelling along a similar path. The humble starfish (Asterias Forbesii) does not have a regular migratory route. It does however, floop. Where 'flooping' is the action of large numbers of starfish travelling along a similar path.
Starfish have been known to live as deep as 6000m
yes, but it helps it crawl around
The answer is no. Starfish have hundreds of little 'feet' on their undersides that they use to crawl around, albeit slowly.
Starfish don't swim they crawl around very slowly on rocks in the ocean on their "feet". Sometimes the current can unstick them from their rocks and make them momentarily be "waterborn" but this is not swimming.
There are no starfish who live on land, though sometimes if they get stranded out of the water, they can crawl back into the water before they suffocate. Usually, the ones washed up on shore are dying though.
crawl I crawl, you crawl, he crawls, we crawl, they crawl.
crawl I crawl, you crawl, he crawls, we crawl, they crawl.
They crawl on top of their prey and munch, munch, munch, nom nom nom. And they also need to breath so they have to have a mouth otherwise they would die :s hope this helpscassie.x
The future tense of "crawl" is "will crawl".
Starfish move using tube feet located on the underside of their arms. These tube feet are filled with water, allowing the starfish to create suction and grip onto surfaces as they move. By contracting and expanding these tube feet in a coordinated manner, starfish can slowly crawl along the ocean floor.
there are cusion starfish, reef starfish, spiny starfish and fire brick starfish in new zealand.
It is called toilet water.